Abhishek Bachchan’s menu
Mumbai street snack (chaat / sidewalk nashta)

Vada pav (Mumbai's burger)

Street foodDocumented🌶️ 🧂moyen50 min

A spicy potato fritter, coated in chickpea batter and fried, slipped into a soft small bun (pav) with chutneys and a fried chili. The king of Bombay street snacks.

Mumbai street snack (chaat / sidewalk nashta)

A spicy potato fritter, coated in chickpea batter and fried, slipped into a soft small bun (pav) with chutneys and a fried chili. The king of Bombay street snacks.

You want to know the real Mumbai? Forget restaurants, go to the vada pav stall on the corner, the one with the never-ending line. You eat it standing, burning hot, the spicy potato in the soft bread, a touch of dry garlic chutney that wakes everything up — two rupees of happiness, na! Between takes, that's what we sneak, even when the dietitian frowns.
Abhishek Bachchan
Ingredients
  • Potatoesa few, boiled (fritter heart)
  • Chickpea flour (besan)one bowl (batter)
  • Green chili, ginger, garlicto taste (heat)
  • Soft dinner rolls (pav)1 per vada (support)
  • Curry leaves, mustard seedsa handful (tempering)
How it was made : Vada pav was born in 1960s-70s Mumbai as a cheap meal for mill workers; the pav (small bun) is a legacy of Portuguese presence on the west coast. It's a modern dish, essentially urban and popular.

See also